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Short Communication

Cerebellar cortical abiotrophy in Wiltshire sheep

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Pages 242-245 | Received 22 Jul 2004, Accepted 22 Nov 2004, Published online: 18 Feb 2011
 

Abstract

AIM: To investigate the nature of a neurological disease in Wiltshire sheep.

METHODS: Three affected lambs were examined, humanely killed and necropsied. Selected neurological tissues were examined by light and electron microscopy.

RESULTS: Primary neurological lesions were confined to the cerebellum and were characterised by loss of Purkinje cells and the presence of large hypertrophied dendrites of surviving Purkinje cells. These contained stacks of smooth endoplasmic reticulum. There was hyperplasia and cell swelling of Bergmann glia. Mild Wallerian-type degeneration affected white matter in the cerebellum and spinal cord.

CONCLUSION: The cerebellar lesions were of a degenerative and reactive rather than hypoplastic nature. These, and the history, suggest a genetic cause with putative inheritance as an autosomal recessive trait. Accordingly, the disorder is described as a cerebellar abiotrophy.

Acknowledgements

We thank Mrs PM Davy for preparation of paraffin sections and staining, and Mr A Hicks for preparation of sections for electron microscopy.

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